{"id":4076,"date":"2025-04-18T16:18:10","date_gmt":"2025-04-18T16:18:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/?p=4076"},"modified":"2025-12-29T14:57:11","modified_gmt":"2025-12-29T14:57:11","slug":"the-1852-boone-county-stampede","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1852-boone-county-stampede\/","title":{"rendered":"The 1852 Boone County Stampede"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"p1\"><strong>DATELINE: NOVEMBER 1852, NEAR PETERSBURG, KY<\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_4082\" style=\"width: 391px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-4082\" class=\" wp-image-4082\" src=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM.png\" alt=\"two story building, brick, overgrown with vegetation; black and white photo\" width=\"381\" height=\"180\" srcset=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM.png 1068w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM-300x142.png 300w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM-1024x483.png 1024w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM-768x362.png 768w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-9.07.12\u202fAM-624x294.png 624w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 381px) 100vw, 381px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-4082\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Federal Hall plantation, photographed in 1938 (Cincinnati Enquirer, September 15, 1968, Newspapers.com)<\/p><\/div>\n<p class=\"p1\">Late one night, three enslaved people\u2014two men and one woman, whose names were not recorded\u2014quietly left Federal Hall, a plantation overlooking the Ohio River just northeast of Petersburg, Kentucky. Crossing the Ohio River into Indiana, their escape marked the latest in a series of group escapes that had slaveholders across northern Kentucky noticeably on edge. [1] Slaveholder Abraham Piatt&#8217;s subsequent efforts to recapture the three enslaved people uncovered an elaborate network of Black and white activists along the borderlands working to assist and shelter freedom seekers.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>STAMPEDE CONTEXT<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>During the fall of 1852, newspaper reports described <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/search-escapes?combine=&amp;title_1=stampede&amp;title=1852&amp;field_event_outcomes_value=All&amp;field_event_escape_numbers_value=All&amp;field_event_route_starting_point_target_id_entityreference_filter=All&amp;field_event_origin_by_state_target_id_entityreference_filter=3338&amp;field_event_escape_attributes_value=All&amp;field_event_freedom_seekers_value=&amp;field_event_slaveholders_value=&amp;field_event_ugrr_operatives_value=\">a wave of mass escapes or &#8220;stampedes&#8221;<\/a> from the Kentucky borderlands, including <a href=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1852-augusta-and-dover-kentucky-stampede\/\">one &#8220;stampede&#8221; of some 30 people from Augusta and Dover, Kentucky<\/a> in late September.\u00a0Contemporary observers understood the escape of the three freedom seekers as the latest episode of this growing &#8220;stampede&#8221; phenomenon. Reporting on the escape of &#8220;three negroes, belonging to Mr. Abraham Piatt, of this county,&#8221; the <em>Boone County<\/em>\u00a0<em>News\u00a0<\/em>warily observed: &#8220;This makes twenty-nine slaves that have ran away from this county since the first of September.&#8221; [2] White Kentuckian Jonas Crisler made a similar observation in a November 11 letter. \u201cThere has been at least 30 ran off this faul [sic],\u201d Crisler wrote. \u201c14 at and about Burlington and the rest about Petersburg. [from slaveholders] Abraham Piatts, Thomas Graves, and William Whittaker.\u201d [3]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">At least one newspaper directly linked the escape of the three freedom seekers to the term &#8220;stampede.&#8221; The Xenia, Ohio <i>Torchlight<\/i> described \u201ca stampede among Kentucky slaves in which a number succeeded in effecting their escape,\u201d before going into greater detail on the escape of the three freedom seekers from Piatt\u2019s Federal Hall plantation. [4] The paper\u2019s editors may have assumed that the three freedom seekers split off from a larger group of escapees, or simply may have used the term \u201cstampede\u201d to refer to the growing pattern of escapes collectively, rather than to a specific episode of mass flight.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>MAIN NARRATIVE<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">White Kentuckians like Jonas Crisler were sure that the freedom seekers had help. In his November 11 letter bemoaning the escape of &#8220;at least 30&#8221; of &#8220;the most valuable&#8221; enslaved people in the county, Crisler aired his suspicions that a network of activists spanned the Ohio River to assist freedom seekers. &#8220;I have no doubt if things continue negroes slaves will be scarce neare [sic] the O. River,&#8221; Crisler added, &#8220;particularly if old Mat Bots and his clan continues their privilege they have had I believe they have been their pilots and is yet.&#8221; [5] It remains unclear exactly whom Crisler was referring to, but he clearly suspected that the freedom seekers had friends to help &#8220;pilot&#8221; them to freedom.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">Crisler&#8217;s hunch was at least partly accurate. There was indeed an active Underground Railroad network across the river in Rising Sun, Indiana, spearheaded by a free Black family\u2013\u2013the Barkshires. Originally enslaved in Boone County, the Barkshires moved across the Ohio River along with their slaveholder\u2019s widow, Nancy Hawkins, during the mid-1830s. Once in Indiana, Mrs. Hawkins took the precaution of formally manumitting (or freeing) the Barkshire family: Samuel Barkshire (already freed in Kentucky in 1833), his wife Harriet (freed in 1838) and their children Arthur, Garrett, Matilda, Emily, Woodford, and Minerva (all formally freed in 1848). [6]<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">From their new home in Rising Sun, the Barkshires led a highly active Underground Railroad network. Kentucky freedom seeker John White told an abolitionist that he escaped during the 1840s with help from \u201chis colored friends, at Rising Sun.\u201d Several years later, when White crossed back into Kentucky to help his wife and children escape, his \u201ccolored friends\u201d advised White to \u201crow across to a point above Rising Sun,\u201d where they would meet him with a wagon ready to escort him and his family to freedom. White&#8217;s attempt to rescue his family came up tragically short, but his multiple interactions with Black activists in Rising Sun point to the existence of a coordinated Underground Railroad network along the banks of the Ohio River. [7]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">The people enslaved on the Piatt\u2019s Federal Hall plantation were aware of this Underground Railroad network in Rising Sun. At least one person enslaved by the Piatts, the family\u2019s coachman (whose name was not recorded) reportedly escaped with the help of Woodford Barkshire, the family\u2019s youngest son. Enraged, the Piatts organized a posse, which traced the missing coachman \u201cacross the Ohio [River] and into Indiana about five miles from Barkshire\u2019s depot.\u201d The Piatts blamed Woodford Barkshire for the escape of their enslaved coachman, but were never able to recapture the coachman. [8]<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_4087\" style=\"width: 256px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/HD_coffinL.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-4087\" class=\"wp-image-4087 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/HD_coffinL-246x300.jpg\" alt=\"b&amp;w engraving, man with necktie\" width=\"246\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/HD_coffinL-246x300.jpg 246w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/HD_coffinL.jpg 485w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 246px) 100vw, 246px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-4087\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Levi Coffin (<a href=\"https:\/\/hd.housedivided.dickinson.edu\/node\/12785\">House Divided Project<\/a>)<\/p><\/div>\n<p>It is unclear whether the three freedom seekers who escaped in November 1852 received assistance from the Barkshires or other free Blacks at Rising Sun, but evidence suggests they did obtain help from Underground Railroad activists in Cincinnati. One account (a recollection penned in 1891) places the <span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">freedom seekers at the Cincinnati home of prominent white abolitionist Levi Coffin. Together with William H. Brisbane, a former South Carolina slaveholder-turned-abolitionist, Coffin &#8220;<\/span>put them on a train on the old Mad River &amp; Lake Erie Railroad, and paid their fare to Sandusky City.&#8221; [9] Although Coffin did not describe this specific escape in his post-Civil War memoir, the abolitionist related that he \u201coften raised money, bought tickets, and forwarded the fugitives by rail to Detroit, Sandusky, or some other point on the lakes, when it was not likely that hunters were ahead of them.\u201d [10]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Coffin may have thought the coast was clear, but the freedom seekers were not yet clear of the Piatts. Soon after the freedom seekers left Cincinnati aboard the Mad River &amp; Lake Erie Railroad, they crossed paths with Donn Piatt\u2013\u2013the nephew of their slaveholder Abraham Piatt. Much about the encounter on the moving rail car remains unclear. It may well have been sheer coincidence that put Donn Piatt on the same northbound train as the enslaved people who had just escaped from his uncle\u2019s Kentucky plantation. But at least one source suggests otherwise. An 1891 recollection, penned by an abolitionist who later assisted the freedom seekers, alleged that the Kentucky Piatts telegraphed ahead to their Ohio relatives \u201cto watch the trains\u201d for the three enslaved people. [11]<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_4085\" style=\"width: 268px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-4085\" class=\"wp-image-4085 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM-258x300.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"258\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM-258x300.png 258w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM-768x892.png 768w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM-624x725.png 624w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.05.21\u202fAM.png 806w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 258px) 100vw, 258px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-4085\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">An 1854 painting depicting Donn Piatt (<a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/donnpiatthiswork00milluoft\/page\/n122\/mode\/1up\">Charles Grant Miller, Donn Piatt: His Work and Ways, 1893<\/a>, Internet Archive)<\/p><\/div>\n<p class=\"p1\">On the surface, Donn Piatt was an odd choice to &#8220;watch the trains&#8221; for the freedom seekers. Born in Ohio in 1819, Piatt was a lawyer and journalist whose antislavery sympathies were publicly known. As his biographer notes, Piatt stood guard outside the Cincinnati office of abolitionist James Birney\u2019s newspaper, the Philanthropist, to defend the paper from a proslavery mob in 1836. A decade later, Piatt was the driving force behind a petition to Congress \u201cremonstrating against the admission of Texas or any other State into the Union as a slave State.\u201d Two years later in 1848, Piatt doubled-down on his opposition to new slaves states when he joined the Free Soil Party, an offshoot of the Democratic Party which protested the expansion of slavery into the western territories. [12]<\/p>\n<p>Crucially, Piatt&#8217;s political opposition to the expansion of slavery did not necessarily translate into a belief in racial equality or a willingness to help enslaved freedom seekers. Rather, all the evidence strongly points to the conclusion that Donn Piatt was determined to return the three freedom seekers to his slaveholding uncle. [13] Aboard the train from Cincinnati, Piatt approached the freedom seekers with a proposition. He \u201ctold them that his father who resides near West Liberty, was in want of laborers.\u201d If \u201cthey would stop with him\u201d and exit the train at West Liberty, Piatt promised steady work. Even better, Piatt and his father would purchase their freedom. [14] It remains unclear how much Piatt actually divulged during this initial interaction. Did he reveal his connection to their enslaver, his uncle? Did the freedom seekers recognize Piatt? Whatever the circumstances, Piatt\u2019s ploy worked. Through some mix of persuasion, intimidation, or perhaps a little of both, the three enslaved Kentuckians got off the train with Piatt at West Liberty, Ohio.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_4093\" style=\"width: 260px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/26403908_e8fa0b79-19fb-4cee-9ef8-4d9ab6bd2b71.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-4093\" class=\"size-full wp-image-4093\" src=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/26403908_e8fa0b79-19fb-4cee-9ef8-4d9ab6bd2b71.png\" alt=\"bearded man, black and white engraving\" width=\"250\" height=\"284\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-4093\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Benjamin McCullough Piatt, the father of Donn Piatt and older brother of slaveholder Abraham Piatt (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.findagrave.com\/memorial\/26403908\/benjamin_mccullough-piatt\">Find-A-Grave<\/a>)<\/p><\/div>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">Soon after the encounter, on Thursday afternoon, November 11, 1852, Donn Piatt\u2019s father, the retired judge Benjamin McCullough Piatt, telegraphed his slaveholding brother Abraham that they had apprehended the freedom seekers.<\/span><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\" style=\"font-size: 1rem;\"> Abraham and the Kentucky Piatts started in pursuit. [15<\/span><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">]<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">When the free Black community near West Liberty learned of the arrangement the Piatts had struck with the freedom seekers, they sprung into action. Local Black residents \u201cunderstood the character of the Piatts,\u201d and recognized that the freedom seekers were in grave danger so long as they stayed with the Piatts. Free Black Oliver Ash was the first to discover that the freedom seekers were with the Piatts. Ash attempted to speak with the freedom seekers, but the Piatts\u2014probably fearing what Ash would say\u2014would not allow the local Black activist \u201cto get access to them.\u201d Undeterred, Ash turned to two sympathetic white lawyers in nearby Bellefontaine, William H. West and James Walker. Upon Ash\u2019s request, the two attorneys filed a writ of habeas corpus before the local probate court. The writ required \u201cold [Benjamin] Piatt to bring them before a judge at Bell[e]fontaine, and to show by what authority he held them.\u201d [16]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Aware that their Kentucky relatives were already en route, Benjamin and Donn Piatt attempted to stall the proceedings. \u201cThe Piatts present attempted by all means within their power, to delay proceedings until the arrival of their Kentucky relatives on the incoming train due within a very few hours,\u201d recalled Robert T. Kennedy, then a 12-year-old boy who witnessed the affair. Attorney William West similarly remembered how Benjamin Piatt \u201cresisted the discharge of the negroes and talked against time,\u201d desperately trying to drag out the hearing.\u00a0Despite the Piatts\u2019 delay tactics, the case moved swiftly and Judge Ezra Bennett\u2014whose sympathies seemed to lie with the freedom seekers\u2014pronounced them \u201cfree to go where they pleased.\u201d [17]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Even so, the local Black community recognized that the Kentucky Piatts might arrive at any moment. Antislavery activists rushed the three freedom seekers out of the hearing room \u201cto a carriage already in waiting,&#8221; driven by Black barber William E. Johnson, a leading activist in Bellefontaine\u2019s African American community. Twelve-year-old Robert Kennedy, together with other young \u201cabolition boys\u201d and interested onlookers, watched Johnson drive the freedom seekers northward. \u201cI can see that carriage now,\u201d Kennedy recalled in 1893, \u201cwith its closely drawn curtains and its two horses, going at the top of their speed, moving up the hill and disappearing out of sight toward that Mecca of all escaping slaves the \u2018Quaker Bottoms.\u2019\u201d [18]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>AFTERMATH<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Actually, the freedom seekers would not find refuge with Quakers, but with college students. Johnson drove the three freedom seekers about eight miles north to the village of Northwood. There, the freedom seekers spent the next two weeks with the faculty and students of Geneva College, a small Presbyterian school. (The school still exists today, but at a new location in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania). Two Geneva students\u2014R.H. Johnston and Robert Archibald McAyeal\u2014each wrote accounts during the 1890s detailing how they provided sanctuary to the freedom seekers on or near campus. Johnston, son of the college\u2019s founder, recalled that some of the freedom seekers stayed with his father, while others concealed themselves in a nearby cave. Protecting the freedom seekers were \u201cstudents well armed with revolvers and double barreled shot guns.\u201d [19]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">After about two weeks, a group of students that included McAyeal, J.M. Elder, J.S.T. Milligan, D.J. Shaw, and J.R. Johnston took out \u201ca large covered wagon as though going hunting.\u201d \u201cWe assumed the appearance of a hunting party, each one carrying a rile,\u201d recalled McAyeal.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Instead of going hunting, the students transported the freedom seekers north through Kenton, Findlay, Perrysburg and then east to Sandusky\u2014\u201ca two days\u2019 and part of two nights\u2019 drive,\u201d McAyeal remembered.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>[20]<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_4089\" style=\"width: 332px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-4089\" class=\"wp-image-4089 \" src=\"http:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM-300x214.png\" alt=\"newspaper ad, black and white text\" width=\"322\" height=\"230\" srcset=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM-300x214.png 300w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM-1024x731.png 1024w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM-768x548.png 768w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM-624x445.png 624w, https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/files\/2025\/04\/Screenshot-2025-04-19-at-10.46.31\u202fAM.png 1382w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 322px) 100vw, 322px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-4089\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Advertisement for Capt. Sylvester Atwood&#8217;s steamboat, the Arrow. (Sandusky, OH Register, November 22, 1852, Newspapers.com)<\/p><\/div>\n<p class=\"p1\">At Sandusky, the freedom seekers boarded Capt. Sylvester Atwood\u2019s steamboat, the <i>Arrow<\/i>. Advertised as the \u201cCheapest, Quickest, and Most Pleasant Route\u201d to Chicago, Atwood\u2019s steamer left Sandusky daily at 6:30 p.m. [21]\u00a0As the Geneva students surely knew, Atwood was not only a skilled steamboat captain, but a reliable friend to enslaved people. Freedom seeker William Edwards, who escaped aboard the <i>Arrow<\/i> in 1848, had witnessed Atwood\u2019s antislavery principles in action. \u201cIn crossing from Sandu[s]ky to Amherstburg [Canada] there were some slave holders on the boat,\u201d Edwards recalled. The enslavers offered Atwood $50 to land at Detroit first, so that they could reenslave Edwards, but Atwood \u201csaid he wouldn\u2019t for $500.\u201d [22]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">By 1852, slaveholders were also growing wise to Atwood&#8217;s Underground Railroad connections. The exact same month that Atwood helped the three freedom seekers from Boone County, another slaveholder sued Atwood to &#8220;recover the value of eight salves that took passage on that boat to Detroit or Canada.&#8221; [23]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">The pending lawsuit hanging over Atwood&#8217;s head did not deter him from helping the three freedom seekers.\u00a0One of the Geneva students joined the freedom seekers aboard the <i>Arrow <\/i>\u201cand saw them safely landed at Malden, Canada,&#8221; near Amherstburg, &#8220;where they were safe under the British flag.\u201d [24]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>FURTHER READING<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The most detailed contemporary account of the escape and subsequent court case, <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221;<\/a> was originally published by the Xenia, Ohio <em>Torchlight<\/em> and widely reprinted by antislavery newspapers. [25]<\/p>\n<p>In 1888, Donn Piatt <span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">published a short story about the escape entitled &#8220;Old Shack,&#8221; which notably softened the reality of his family&#8217;s ties to slavery. Piatt based the story around an old enslaved man named &#8220;Shack,&#8221; who claimed to have been his grandfather&#8217;s &#8220;body-servant during the Revolution and through the war of &#8217;12.&#8221; According to Piatt, Shack one day appeared at his father&#8217;s West Liberty, Ohio home &#8220;at the head of about twenty colored men, women, and children, escaped salves from my grandfather&#8217;s farm, Federal Hall, Boone County, Kentucky.&#8221; Inflating the number of freedom seekers from three (as all contemporary accounts stated) to 20, Piatt also conveniently elided his own role in redirecting the freedom seekers off the train and to his father&#8217;s home. Moreover, Piatt maintained that his father, Benjamin, &#8220;was perfectly amazed at their appearance, for slavery at Federal Hall, as he remembered it, was purely nominal. The negroes worked when they felt like it, which was very seldom.&#8221; Piatt claimed that when his father notified the Kentucky relatives &#8220;that his negroes were at [the family home called] Macochee,&#8221; his grandfather, Col. Jacob Piatt (who had died nearly two decades earlier in 1834) &#8220;replied by post, in a letter that cost twenty-five cents, that he felt very much relieved at their going, and hoped steps might be taken to prevent their return,&#8221; denouncing the enslaved people&#8217;s &#8220;laziness, lying, and theft.&#8221; As contemporary sources make clear, the Kentucky Piatts actively pursued the three enslaved people. [26]<\/span><\/p>\n<p>During the 1890s, historian Wilbur Siebert collected accounts from antislavery lawyer <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">William H. West<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/23425\/rec\/1\">Robert Kennedy<\/a>, who shed light on the response of Bellefontaine&#8217;s Black community and the habeas corpus hearing. [27]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>[1]\u00a0<em>Boone County News<\/em>, quoted in <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/louisville-ky-courier-november-13-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Louisville (KY) <em>Courier<\/em>, November 13, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[2] <em>Boone County News<\/em>, quoted in <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/louisville-ky-courier-november-13-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Louisville (KY) <em>Courier<\/em>, November 13, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[3] Jonas Crisler letter, November 11, 1852, Crisler Family Papers, Kentucky Historical Society, excerpted at African Americans on the Kentucky Borderlands, [<a href=\"https:\/\/omekas.bcplhistory.org\/s\/borderlands\/item\/2826\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[4] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[5] Jonas Crisler letter, November 11, 1852, Crisler Family Papers, Kentucky Historical Society, excerpted at African Americans on the Kentucky Borderlands, [<a href=\"https:\/\/omekas.bcplhistory.org\/s\/borderlands\/item\/2826\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[6] Hillary Delaney, &#8220;The Underground Railroad at Slavery\u2019s Banks: An Unlikely Alliance,&#8221;\u00a0<em>Untold Indiana<\/em> (October 4, 2018), [<a href=\"https:\/\/blog.history.in.gov\/the-underground-railroad-at-slaverys-banks-an-unlikely-alliance\/\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[7]\u00a0Levi Coffin,<em>\u00a0Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, The Reputed President of the Underground Railroad<\/em> (Cincinnati, OH: Western Tract Society, 1876), 216-222, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Reminiscences_of_Levi_Coffin_the_Reputed\/fS4OAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;pg=PA217&amp;printsec=frontcover\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[8] &#8220;Underground Railroad: More Western Memories\u2013\u2013How Slaves Were Harbored and Forwarded to Canada Before the War,&#8221; Brooklyn (NY)\u00a0<em>Eagle<\/em>, May 24, 1887.<\/p>\n<p>[9] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;A Reminiscence of the Slavery Era,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">Boston (MA) <em>Daily<\/em> <em>Traveller<\/em>, December 5, 1891<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[10] Coffin,<em> Reminiscences of Levi Coffin<\/em>, 594, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/Reminiscences_of_Levi_Coffin_the_Reputed\/fS4OAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;pg=PA594&amp;printsec=frontcover\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[11] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/henderson-ky-democratic-banner-runaway-slaves-november-25-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Henderson (KY) <em>Democratic Banner<\/em>, &#8220;R[u]naway Slaves,&#8221; November 25, 1852<\/a>; <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a>; Boston Travleler<\/p>\n<p>[12] Peter Bridges,\u00a0<em>Donn Piatt: Gadfly of the Gilded Age<\/em> (Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 2012), 16-23.<\/p>\n<p>[13] Piatt&#8217;s biographer, Peter Bridges, casts doubt that Donn Piatt was the family member aboard the train who encountered the freedom seekers. Bridges suggests that Piatt&#8217;s antislavery background made it unlikely he would take such action. Moreover, Bridges points out that a widely reprinted 1852 article identifies the culprit as &#8220;one Don Piatt, an ex judge of the Hamilton Common Pleas Court.&#8221; Piatt&#8217;s father, Benjamin McCullough Piatt, was a former judge at the time; whereas Donn Piatt &#8220;was still on the bench at Cincinnati&#8221; in 1852. See Bridges, <em>Donn Piatt<\/em>, 22-24. However, the recollection of antislavery lawyer William H. West clearly identifies Donn Piatt, not his father, as the person who first encountered the freedom seekers. See Interview with William H. West, August 11, 1894, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">[14] <\/span><a style=\"font-size: 1rem;\" href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a style=\"font-size: 1rem;\" href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[15] <em>Boone County News<\/em>, quoted in <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/louisville-ky-courier-november-13-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Louisville (KY) <em>Courier<\/em>, November 13, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[16] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a>; Interview with William H. West, August 11, 1894, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p>[17] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a>; Robert T. Kennedy to Wilbur Siebert, January 22, 1893, Bellefontaine, Oh., Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/23425\/rec\/1\">WEB<\/a>]; Interview with William H. West, August 11, 1894, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p>[18] Interview with William H. West, August 11, 1894, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>]; Robert T. Kennedy to Wilbur Siebert, January 22, 1893, Bellefontaine, Oh., Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/23425\/rec\/1\">WEB<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p>[19] RH Johnston 1894; <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;A Reminiscence of the Slavery Era,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">Boston (MA) <em>Daily<\/em> <em>Traveller<\/em>, December 5, 1891<\/a>. Especial thanks to Kae Kirkwood, archivist at Geneva College, for her help identifying Richard Archibald McAyeal (Class of 1853) as the likely author of the 1891 reminiscence. (The author of the 1891 article identified himself as a student at Geneva in 1852 but signed his name simply &#8220;R.A.M.&#8221;)<\/p>\n<p>[20] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;A Reminiscence of the Slavery Era,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">Boston (MA) <em>Daily<\/em> <em>Traveller<\/em>, December 5, 1891<\/a>; RH Johnston 1894]<\/p>\n<p>[21] &#8220;Cheapest, Quickest, and Most Pleasant Route,&#8221; Sandusky (OH)\u00a0<em>Register<\/em>, November 22, 1852<\/p>\n<p>[22] Statement of Dr. William Edwards of Amherstburg, Ontario, August 3, 1896, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/22662\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[23] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/marysville-oh-tribune-november-17-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Marysville (OH) <em>Tribune<\/em>, November 17, 1852<\/a>. The charges may have been dropped. I have been unable to find any outcome of this case.<\/p>\n<p>[24] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;A Reminiscence of the Slavery Era,&#8221; <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/boston-ma-daily-traveller-reminiscence-slavery-era-december-5-1891\" hreflang=\"en\">Boston (MA) <em>Daily<\/em> <em>Traveller<\/em>, December 5, 1891<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[25] <a style=\"font-size: 1rem;\" href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">&#8220;Fugitive Slave Case in one Chapter,&#8221; <\/a><a style=\"font-size: 1rem;\" href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/ravenna-oh-ohio-star-fugitive-slave-case-one-chapter-december-1-1852\" hreflang=\"en\">Ravenna (OH) <em>Ohio Star<\/em>, December 1, 1852<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[26] Donn Piatt,\u00a0<em>The Lone Grave of the Shenandoah, And Other Tales<\/em> (Chicago, New York, and San Francisco: Belford, Clarke &amp; Co., 1888), 81-85, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/books\/edition\/The_Lone_Grave_of_the_Shenandoah_and_Oth\/1E_TAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;pg=PA81&amp;printsec=frontcover\">WEB<\/a>].<\/p>\n<p>[27] Robert T. Kennedy to Wilbur Siebert, January 22, 1893, Bellefontaine, Oh., Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/23425\/rec\/1\">WEB<\/a>]; Interview with William H. West, August 11, 1894, Wilbur Siebert Papers, Ohio History Connection, [<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohiomemory.org\/digital\/collection\/siebert\/id\/6888\/rec\/2\">WEB<\/a>]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>DATELINE: NOVEMBER 1852, NEAR PETERSBURG, KY Late one night, three enslaved people\u2014two men and one woman, whose names were not recorded\u2014quietly left Federal Hall, a plantation overlooking the Ohio River just northeast of Petersburg, Kentucky. Crossing the Ohio River into Indiana, their escape marked the latest in a series of group escapes that had slaveholders [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":130,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[21281],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4076","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ky-narratives"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4076","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/130"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4076"}],"version-history":[{"count":13,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4076\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4094,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4076\/revisions\/4094"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4076"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4076"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4076"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}